Finding resources for teaching social studies

Her famous speech given in Ohio in 1851 is a simple yet eloquent argument on the equality of the sexes.

There is a bit of controversy, however, as two versions have been recorded, one during the convention, a second a few years later.

The second version is the widely known speech. It is notable though that the second version is in a southern-style dialect which is not how the native New Yorker who only spoke Dutch for her early years talked.

[…] the Social Studies and History Teacher’s Blog. To begin I looked at the February post titled Sojourner Truth’s “Ain’t I a Woman” speech. This got me thinking about primary sources. This famous speech was given twice, once at a […]